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"Typically Tropical" are generally remembered today only for their 1975 number one hit single "Barbados", and are usually described as being "one-hit wonders". However, Jeff Calvert and Max West continued to record together for another six years, although not always under the name Typically Tropical, which they believed was 'limiting'.[2]

After hearing the demo version of Barbados, recorded in the spring of 1974, David Howell of Gull Records wanted to hear more, but instead Jeff and Max asked for £1500 to finish both Barbados and another track they'd written, "The Ghost Song" and to record Barbados' B-side "Sandy". Having agreed, Gull then signed them up for three singles. Barbados was finished at the end of 1974, but Gull decided to wait until May 1975 to release it. In August that year it reached number one, and the rather surprised duo, having performed it on Top Of The Pops, decided to write another nine songs for the album "Barbados Sky", which was released at the same time as the follow-up single "Rocket Now" (backed with "Hole In The Sky"), and sold around 8000 copies.[citation needed]

Opening with 'Barbados', the version on the album was slightly different. It began with an additional pre-take-off conversation between Captain Tobias Willcock and Air Traffic Control, whereas the single version begins with the Captain's welcome to his passengers. At the beginning of the single, but not on the album, is the unusual sound of grasshoppers chirruping (which also features at the end of Rocket Now), and a dog barking. The album version of the track curtails the single's original ending, fading out earlier.

'The Ghost Song' was released as a single in November under the names "Calvert & West" with "Eternity Isle" as the B-side, but as with all their subsequent singles, it didn't chart.

In May 1976 the third single from the album, "Everybody Plays The Fool" was released. Further singles were released under a variety of names, but also did not chart.

The duo's final original single was "Lady D", released in June 1981 on their own label, Whisper, which they'd originally set up to release songs by Sarah Brightman (having written the hit "I Lost My Heart To A Starship Trooper" in 1978).